A Large-Scale Empirical Study of Geotagging Behavior on Twitter
Clicks: 6
ID: 282389
2019
Geotagging on social media has become an important proxy for understanding
people's mobility and social events. Research that uses geotags to infer public
opinions relies on several key assumptions about the behavior of geotagged and
non-geotagged users. However, these assumptions have not been fully validated.
Lack of understanding the geotagging behavior prohibits people further
utilizing it. In this paper, we present an empirical study of geotagging
behavior on Twitter based on more than 40 billion tweets collected from 20
million users. There are three main findings that may challenge these common
assumptions. Firstly, different groups of users have different geotagging
preferences. For example, less than 3% of users speaking in Korean are
geotagged, while more than 40% of users speaking in Indonesian use geotags.
Secondly, users who report their locations in profiles are more likely to use
geotags, which may affects the generability of those location prediction
systems on non-geotagged users. Thirdly, strong homophily effect exists in
users' geotagging behavior, that users tend to connect to friends with similar
geotagging preferences.
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carley2019a
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Authors | Binxuan Huang; Kathleen M. Carley |
Journal | arXiv |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | DOI not found |
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